Timeline: The Fall of Rep. Mark FoleyAs the controversy surrounding former Rep. Mark Foley (R-FL) unfolds, attention has turned to who knew what, and when. Here, a look at key dates in the developing scandal.

Timeline: The Fall of Rep. Mark Foley

Former Rep. Mark Foley was first elected to the House of Representatives in 1994. In this May 2005 file photo, Foley, right, stands behind John Walsh, host of TV's America's Most Wanted, at a press conference announcing plans to overhaul sex-offender laws.
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As the controversy surrounding former Rep. Mark Foley (R-FL) unfolds, attention has turned to who knew what, and when. The Republican leadership says it was informed last fall that Foley had sent "over friendly" e-mails to a former page. But GOP leaders insist they did not learn of sexually explicit instant messages to other former pages until last Friday. Here, a look at key dates in the developing scandal:

1997: Tyson Vivyan, a congressional page at the time, receives sexually suggestive computer messages from an anonymous sender who turns out to be Foley, according to statements by Vivyan.

2001: A Republican staff member tells congressional pages to "watch out" for Foley, according to ABC News.

2003: Foley reportedly writes sexually explicit instant messages to a young man who formerly served as a House page. In May, Foley faces questions about his sexual orientation as he prepares to run for a Senate seat in Florida. He later drops out of the race.

Summer 2005: Foley exchanges e-mails with a former page from Louisiana. The e-mails ask about the page's age (then 16) and his birthday and request a picture.

Fall 2005: The former page contacts the office of his sponsor, Rep. Rodney Alexander (R-LA), about the e-mails. Describing the e-mails, the boy writes, "Maybe it is just me being paranoid, but seriously. This freaked me out."

Alexander's chief of staff informs the office of House Speaker Dennis Hastert's office about the e-mail exchange, but declines to show the message to Hastert's staff and to the clerk of the House, Jeff Trandahl, who administers the page program.

Alexander's chief of staff describes the e-mails as being "over friendly" but not of a sexual nature. The chief of staff says that the family simply wants the contact to stop. Hastert said last week he was not aware of "a different set of communications which were sexually explicit ... which Mr. Foley reportedly sent another former page or pages."

Trandahl and Rep. John Shimkus (R-IL), chairman of the House Page Board, meet with Foley, who assures them he was only acting as a mentor to the boy. Shimkus orders Foley to cease contact with the boy. Foley agrees.

November 2005: The 16-year-old Louisiana boy gives copies of Foley's e-mails to the St. Petersburg Times, describing them as "very inappropriate." The paper assigns two reporters to investigate. The paper says it decided not to write a story because of the seriousness of what would be implied, and because the boy and the family would not go on the record.

The Miami Herald says it, too, received a copy of the e-mails, but it decided not to go public because the messages were not sexually explicit and were subject to interpretation.

Spring 2006: Alexander mentions the Foley issue to Rep. Tom Reynolds (R-NY), chairman of the House Republican Campaign Committee. Reynolds says he raised the issue at a meeting with Hastert. Hastert says he does not explicitly recall this conversation, but he does not dispute Reynolds' recollection that he reported on the problem and its resolution.

Alexander's office also tells the office of House Majority Leader Rep. John Boehner (R-OH) about the e-mails. Boehner has given conflicting statements, but on Tuesday, he told an Ohio radio station that he discussed the matter with Hastert, who told him it had been resolved.

July 2006: The FBI receives some Foley-related e-mail correspondence in July, but concludes that no federal law had been violated, according to a law enforcement official who spoke to the Associated Press on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing investigation. The FBI official would not detail how many e-mails the FBI initially received, or whether they came from multiple sources.

Sept. 29, 2006: Revelations emerge of sexually explicit instant messages Foley sent in 2003 to former pages. Foley resigns. The House votes to refer the matter to the ethics committee.

Sept. 30, 2006: Hastert says he is setting up a hot line for current and former pages and their families to report problems about the page program.

Oct. 1, 2006: Hastert writes a letter to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales asking for an investigation of Foley's conduct. Hastert writes a similar letter to Florida Gov. Jeb Bush. The FBI reopens its preliminary investigation.

Oct. 2: Foley's attorney says the former congressman is battling alcoholism and has checked into a rehabilitation facility.

Oct. 4: Kirk Fordham, a former congressional aide, says that he informed Hastert's office about complaints that pages had made regarding Foley's "inappropriate behavior" before 2004. He says the complaints did not suggest Foley had been overtly sexual with pages, merely "overly friendly." Hastert's office denies receiving such information. Fordham worked for Foley until January 2004; on Oct. 4, he resigned as chief of staff for Rep. Reynolds.

Oct. 5: The House ethics committee opens an investigation into the Foley scandal. Hastert tells reporters that he did not know about the sexually explicit messages sent by Foley until last week, but he accepts responsibility for the matter. But Hastert insists he will stay on as leader of House Republicans.

Meanwhile, another former page, Tyson Vivyan of Atlanta, 26, says that he received sexually suggestive computer messages in 1997, years before the communications exposed last week, from an anonymous sender who turned out to be Foley.

Sources: Compiled from wire, NPR staff and media reports. The Associated Press contributed to this report.